Hi Aaron, The use of AGPL means that your OpenJPEG fork will not be used for commercial projects and any enhancements you make will not make there way into OpenJPEG.
You may have a good reason for choosing this licence and as such it is your choice. Either way good luck. Regards Damian On 3 February 2016 at 19:28, Aaron Boxer <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear GDAL Developers, > > I am developing a new open source JPEG 2000 toolkit, based on OpenJPEG. > > It is a drop-in replacement for OpenJPEG, but features: > > - fast precinct-level decode > - lower memory usage > - better performance - currently it is roughly 1/3 the perf of Kakadu, > (tested on windows), and I am hoping to get it down to around 1/2 > > I was originally hoping to merge these changes into OpenJPEG. For a number > of reasons, I decided to start a new project instead. One of my main > motivations is the fact that OpenJPEG is a reference implementation, > designed for correctness and portability. My main interest is performance. > > I have ported the code to C++14, so developers get access to all of the > modern C++ goodness such as class hierarchies, lambdas, threading library, > exceptions, standard template library, etc. > > Gone is support for older compilers, including VS 2010. > > The code is licensed under the AGPL, to ensure that all code modifications > get contributed back to the community. > > It you find this useful, please visit > > https://github.com/GrokImageCompression/ronin > > For those who need a more permissive license, or who prefer using the > reference implementation, there is always good old OpenJPEG. > > Kind Regards, > Aaron > > > > _______________________________________________ > gdal-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/gdal-dev >
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